All Customer Service Employees need this book |
I once had an interesting conversation that started with this prompt: “There is a vast difference between being 'nice' and being 'polite.’” A few people, and I have to believe that they are among those rarities who are actually nice all of the time (yes, they do exist but I am unfortunately not one of them), argued that there is no difference between the two words. For most of the discussion, however, I found that people do tend to notice distinct differences between these two words and what they meant to them.
I bring this up for two reasons:
- Being a word nerd, I’m fascinated by how two words meaning essentially the same thing conversationally (despite specific definitions) and used interchangeably so often can evolve to conjure such specific reactions, and
- I had a long phone call where I realized that the ‘polite’ person that I was talking to on the phone was not a ‘nice’ person at all. In fact, I was pretty sure that she was giving me the finger while she was saying, “Bless your heart,” safely from her end of the phone line. I got off the phone with this "customer service rep" feeling hollow, irritated, and condescended to, and eventually just angry. NOT good for the old mental/emotional well-being.
You probably grew up across the street from this lady |
For those not familiar with southern sarcasm, ‘Bless your heart’ can sometimes be a meaningful expression of sympathy, but more often than not it’s a southern lady’s socially acceptable way of saying “Why the hell do you think I care?”
Now it's got me wondering about my own responses to people and feeling slightly guilty. You know what I mean... The phone rings at work and, blast that caller ID, it’s one of those people you'd rather give extraneous body parts than have to deal with. But, since you have a job to do for which you are being paid, on goes that plasticine smile with the glazed eyes as you say, “No, you’re no problem at all, really, how can I help you?” All the while your imagination is dreaming up scenarios in which it would be acceptable for you to scream “Go away already you horrible person!”
See? Polite, but not nice, and certainly not in keeping with my goal to remain positive. On Monday I talked about faking it til we make it as a way to trick ourselves into being more naturally optimistic. When I let myself hide behind the polite mask I'm doing the opposite - I'm allowing myself to be negative by justifying to myself that it's not *my* fault that so-and-so is a pain to deal with instead of just putting my big girl pants on and take some pride in a job well done even if it means a momentary irritation.
Now that I’ve given you the set up, what do you think? What do these two words mean to you, and do you feel affected differently by them?
Now that I’ve given you the set up, what do you think? What do these two words mean to you, and do you feel affected differently by them?
No. The two words are not the same. I've known a lot of really nice people who have very little manners. And a lot of awful people with perfect manners.
ReplyDeleteAnd personally, I'll try to be polite, even to people I can hardly stand, because being rude doesn't ever get you anywhere. Though I did flip off a lady at a red light once, but seriously...she started it.
I think down here in the south "politeness" can be just as cutting a weapon as a direct insult. The more they call you "sweetie" the worse it is...
DeleteI try to be polite and nice. Honestly I do. Lol but if I have told u something in the polite way...and u still don't get it and continue to cross that line. Then I do get rude..bc obviously that's the only way to get through to u.
ReplyDeleteIt can be soooo hard sometimes. That's one reason I'm so thankful for email. I can take a break and vent and fuss about something like that outloud BEFORE I have to respond to the email. By then I can usually get my tactful side back in place :-)
DeleteYes!!! I have had to talk to people about their lack of "bedside manners" many of time. It goes a long way! Some can be nice but with snark and that isn't cool. It's all in how genuine you are ;)
ReplyDeleteSometimes they catch me so off my guard with it that I just don't even think of responding to it until I'm walking away with the realization that "hey, he/she was being a jerk!" Then I have all those angsty and pithy conversations in my head with what I SHOULD have said. I'm really witty when I've got a few hours to come up with something ;-)
DeletePolite and nice are definitely two different things. One doesn't need to have sympathy to be polite. Some of the best villains are polite!
ReplyDeleteExcellent comparison! I didn't even think about how polite and genteel the best villains can be... right before they shoot you in the back :-)
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